The train did not slow down for Sandtown
until after mid-afternoon, and when the party of young
folk alighted from the private car there were still
five miles of heavy roads between them and Lighthouse
Point. It had been pleasant enough when Ruth
Fielding and her companions left Cheslow, far up in
New York State; but now to the south and east the heavens
were masked by heavy, lead-colored clouds, and the
wind came from the sea in wild, rain-burdened gusts.
“My! how sharp it is!” cried Ruth.
“And it’s salt!”
“The salt’s in the air especially
when there is a storm at sea,” explained Heavy.
“And I guess we’ve landed just in time
to see a gale. I hope it won’t last long
and spoil our good time.”
“Oh, but to see the ocean in
a storm that will be great!” cried
Madge Steele.
The Stones’ house had been open
for some days and there were two wagons in readiness
for the party. The three boys and the baggage
went in one, while the five girls crowded into the
other and both wagons were driven promptly toward
the shore.
The girls were just as eager as they
could be, and chattered like magpies. All but
Mary Cox. She had been much unlike her usual self
all day. When she had joined the party in the
private car that morning, Ruth noticed that The Fox
looked unhappy. Her eyes were swollen as though
she had been weeping and she had very little to say.
For one thing Ruth was really thankful.
The Fox said nothing to her about the accident on
the Lanawaxa. She may have been grateful
for Ruth’s timely assistance when she fell into
Lake Osago; but she succeeded in effectually hiding
her gratitude.
Heavy, however, confided to Ruth that
Mary had found sore trouble at home when she returned
from Briarwood. Her father had died the year
before and left his business affairs in a tangle.
Mary’s older brother, John, had left college
and set about straightening out matters. And now
something serious had happened to John. He had
gone away on business and for weeks his mother had
heard nothing from him.
“I didn’t know but Mary
would give up coming with us just as Lluella
and Belle did,” said the stout girl. “But
there is nothing she can do at home, and I urged her
to come. We must all try to make it particularly
pleasant for her.”
Ruth was perfectly willing to do her
share; but one can scarcely make it pleasant for a
person who refuses to speak to one. And the girl
from the Red Mill could not help feeling that The
Fox had done her best to make her withdraw
from Jennie Stone’s party.
The sea was not in sight until the
wagons had been driven more than half the distance
to the Stone bungalow. Then, suddenly rounding
a sandy hill, they saw the wide sweep of the ocean
in the distance, and the small and quieter harbor
on the inviting shore of which the bungalow was built.
Out upon the far point of this nearer
sandy ridge was built the white shaft of the Sokennet
Light. Sokennet village lay upon the other side
of the harbor. On this side a few summer homes
had been erected, and beyond the lighthouse was a
low, wind-swept building which Heavy told the girls
was the life saving station.
“We’ll have lots of fun
down there. Cap’n Abinadab Cope is just
the nicest old man you ever saw!” declared Heavy.
“And he can tell the most thrilling stories
of wrecks along the coast. And there’s the
station ‘day book’ that records everything
they do, from the number of pounds of coal and gallons
of kerosene used each day, to how they save whole
shiploads of people ”
“Let’s ask him to save
a shipload for our especial benefit,” laughed
Madge. “I suppose there’s only one
wreck in fifteen or twenty years, hereabout.”
“Nothing of the kind! Sometimes
there are a dozen in one winter. And lots of
times the surfmen go off in a boat and save ships from
being wrecked. In a fog, you know. Ships
get lost in a fog sometimes, just as folks get lost
in a forest ”
“Or in a blizzard,” cried
Helen, with a lively remembrance of their last winter’s
experience at Snow Camp.
“Nothing like that will happen
here, you know,” said Ruth, laughing. “Heavy
promised that we shouldn’t be lost in a snowstorm
at Lighthouse Point.”
“But hear the sea roar!”
murmured Mary Cox. “Oh! look at the waves!”
They had now come to where they could
see the surf breaking over a ledge, or reef, off the
shore some half-mile. The breakers piled up as
high seemingly as a tall house;
and when they burst upon the rock they completely
hid it for the time.
“Did you ever see such a sight!”
cried Madge. “’The sea in its might’!”
The gusts of rain came more plentifully
as they rode on, and so rough did the wind become,
the girls were rather glad when the wagons drove in
at the gateway of the Stone place.
Immediately around the house the owner
had coaxed some grass to grow at an expense,
so Jennie said, of about “a dollar a blade.”
But everywhere else was the sand cream-colored,
yellow, gray and drab, or slate where the water washed
over it and left it glistening.
The entrance was at the rear; the
bungalow faced the cove, standing on a ridge which as
has been before said continued far out to
the lighthouse.
“And a woman keeps the light.
Her husband kept it for many, many years; but he died
a year ago and the government has continued her as
keeper. She’s a nice old lady, is Mother
Purling, and she can tell stories, too, that will
make your hair curl!”
“I’m going over there
right away,” declared Mary, who had begun to
be her old self again. “Mine is as straight
as an Indian’s.”
“A woman alone in a lighthouse!
isn’t that great?” cried Helen.
“She is alone sometimes; but
there is an assistant keeper. His name is Crab and
that’s what he is!” declared Heavy.
“Oh, I can see right now that
we’re going to have great fun here,” observed
Madge.
This final conversation was carried
on after the girls had run into the house for shelter
from a sharp gust of rain, and had been taken upstairs
by their hostess to the two big rooms in the front
of the bungalow which they were to sleep in.
From the windows they could see across the cove to
the village and note all the fishing and pleasure boats
bobbing at their moorings.
Right below them was a long dock built
out from Mr. Stone’s property, and behind it
was moored a motor-launch, a catboat, and two rowboats quite
a little fleet.
“You see, there isn’t
a sail in the harbor nor outside. That
shows that the storm now blowing up is bound to be
a stiff one,” explained Heavy. “For
the fishermen of Sokennet are as daring as any on the
coast, and I have often seen them run out to the banks
into what looked to be the very teeth of a gale!”
Meanwhile, the boys had been shown
to a good-sized room at the back of the house, and
they were already down again and outside, breasting
the intermittent squalls from the sea. They had
no curls and furbelows to arrange, and ran all about
the place before dinner time.
But ere that time arrived the night
had shut down. The storm clouds hung low and
threatened a heavy rainfall at any moment. Off
on the horizon was a livid streak which seemed to
divide the heavy ocean from the wind-thrashed clouds.
The company that gathered about the
dinner table was a lively one, even if the wind did
shriek outside and the thunder of the surf kept up
a continual accompaniment to their conversation like
the deeper notes of a mighty organ. Mr. Stone,
himself, was not present; but one of Heavy’s
young aunts had come down to oversee the party, and
she was no wet blanket upon the fun.
Of course, the “goodies”
on the table were many. Trust Heavy for that.
The old black cook, who had been in the Stone family
for a generation, doted on the stout girl and would
cook all day to please her young mistress.
They had come to the dessert course
when suddenly Tom Cameron half started from his chair
and held up a hand for silence.
“What’s the matter, Tommy?”
demanded Busy Izzy, inquisitively. “What
do you hear?”
“Listen!” commanded Tom.
The hilarity ceased suddenly, and
all those at the table listened intently. The
sudden hush made the noise of the elements seem greater.
“What did you hear?” finally asked his
sister.
“A gun there!”
A distant, reverberating sound was
repeated. They all heard it. Heavy and her
aunt, Miss Kate, glanced at each other with sudden
comprehension.
“What is it?” Ruth cried.
“It’s a signal gun,” Heavy said,
rather weakly.
“A ship in distress,”
explained Miss Kate, and her tone hushed their clamor.
A third time the report sounded.
The dining room door opened and the butler entered.
“What is it, Maxwell?” asked Miss Kate.
“A ship on the Second Reef,
Miss,” he said hurriedly. “She was
sighted just before dark, driving in. But it
was plain that she was helpless, and had gone broadside
on to the rock. She’ll break up before morning,
the fishermen say. It will be an awful wreck,
ma’am, for there is no chance of the sea going
down.”